Life course financial mobility and later-life memory function and decline by gender, and race and ethnicity: an intersectional analysis of the US KHANDLE and STAR cohort studies

IF 13.4 Q1 GERIATRICS & GERONTOLOGY
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Background

Intersectionality has rarely been considered in research studies of cognitive ageing. We investigated whether life-course financial mobility is differentially associated with later-life memory function and decline across intersectional identities defined by gender, and race and ethnicity.

Methods

Data were from two harmonised multiethnic cohorts (the Kaiser Healthy Aging and Diverse Life Experiences cohort and the Study of Healthy Aging in African Americans cohort) in northern California, USA (n=2340). Life-course financial mobility, measured using a combination of self-reported financial capital measures in childhood (from birth to age 16 years) and later adulthood (at the cohort baseline) was defined as consistently high, upwardly mobile, downwardly mobile, or consistently low. We clustered individuals into 32 strata representing intersectional identities defined by life-course financial mobility combined with gender, and race and ethnicity. Verbal episodic memory was assessed using the Spanish and English Neuropsychological Assessment Scales over four waves from 2017 to 2023. Adjusted mixed-effects linear regression models were estimated with and without fixed effects of gender, race and ethnicity, and financial mobility, to evaluate whether the random effects of the intersectional identity strata contributed variance to memory beyond individual fixed effects.

Findings

Mean age was 73·6 years (SD 8·1). Of 2340 individuals, 1460 (62·4%) were women, 880 (37·6%) were men, 388 (16·6%) were Asian, 1136 (48·5%) were Black, 334 (14·3%) were Latinx, and 482 (20·6%) were White. Consistently low and downwardly mobile financial capital were strongly negatively associated with later-life memory at baseline (–0·162 SD units [95% CI –0·273 to –0·051] for consistently low and –0·171 [–0·250 to –0·092] for downwardly mobile), but not rate of change over time. Intersectional identities contributed 0·2% of memory variance after accounting for the fixed effects of gender, race and ethnicity, and financial mobility.

Interpretation

Consistently low and downward life-course financial mobility are associated with lower later-life memory function. Intersectional identities defined by financial mobility in addition to gender, and race and ethnicity, contribute negligible additional variance to later-life memory in this study setting.

Funding

US National Institute on Aging, US National Institutes of Health.

按性别、种族和民族划分的生命过程财务流动性与晚年记忆功能和衰退:对美国 KHANDLE 和 STAR 队列研究的交叉分析。
背景:认知老龄化研究很少考虑交叉性。我们研究了不同性别、种族和民族的交叉性身份,其生命历程中的财务流动性是否与晚年记忆功能和衰退有不同程度的关联:数据来自美国加利福尼亚州北部两个统一的多种族队列(凯撒健康老龄化和多样化生活经历队列和非裔美国人健康老龄化研究队列)(n=2340)。生活过程中的财务流动性采用童年(从出生到 16 岁)和成年后(在队列基线)自我报告的财务资本测量组合来衡量,被定义为持续高流动性、向上流动性、向下流动性或持续低流动性。我们将个体划分为 32 个阶层,这些阶层代表了由生命历程中的财务流动性、性别、种族和民族所定义的交叉身份。在 2017 年至 2023 年的四次波次中,我们使用西班牙语和英语神经心理评估量表对口头外显记忆进行了评估。对调整后的混合效应线性回归模型进行了估算,其中包括和不包括性别、种族和民族以及经济流动性的固定效应,以评估交叉身份分层的随机效应是否超越了个人固定效应而对记忆力产生影响:平均年龄为 73-6 岁(SD 8-1)。在 2340 人中,女性 1460 人(62-4%),男性 880 人(37-6%),亚裔 388 人(16-6%),黑人 1136 人(48-5%),拉丁裔 334 人(14-3%),白人 482 人(20-6%)。金融资本持续偏低和向下流动与基线时的晚年记忆密切负相关(持续偏低为-0-162 SD单位[95% CI -0-273至-0-051],向下流动为-0-171[-0-250至-0-092]),但与随时间变化的比率无关。在考虑了性别、种族和民族以及经济流动性的固定效应后,交叉身份占记忆方差的 0-2%:解释:生命过程中持续较低的财务流动性和下降的财务流动性与较低的晚年记忆功能有关。在这项研究中,除了性别、种族和民族之外,由财务流动性定义的交叉身份对晚年记忆造成的额外差异微乎其微:美国国家老龄化研究所、美国国立卫生研究院。
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来源期刊
Lancet Healthy Longevity
Lancet Healthy Longevity GERIATRICS & GERONTOLOGY-
CiteScore
16.30
自引率
2.30%
发文量
192
审稿时长
12 weeks
期刊介绍: The Lancet Healthy Longevity, a gold open-access journal, focuses on clinically-relevant longevity and healthy aging research. It covers early-stage clinical research on aging mechanisms, epidemiological studies, and societal research on changing populations. The journal includes clinical trials across disciplines, particularly in gerontology and age-specific clinical guidelines. In line with the Lancet family tradition, it advocates for the rights of all to healthy lives, emphasizing original research likely to impact clinical practice or thinking. Clinical and policy reviews also contribute to shaping the discourse in this rapidly growing discipline.
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